03256cam a22003373u 450000100060000000300070000600500170001300600020003000700050003200800410003704000110007804100170008905000130010610000860011924500540020526400510025930000470031033600260035733700260038333800360040950000310044550801910047652018640066753400910253165300810262265300450270365300360274865300390278465300520282385600430287578130UtSlPG20260610134818.0mcr n260607r20261946utu|||||o|||||||||||||| d aUtSlPG 7aen2iso639-1 4aKZaD7311 aUnited States. Office of Chief of Counsel for the Prosecution of Axis Criminality10aNazi conspiracy and aggression, Volume 04 (of 11) 1aSalt Lake City, UT :bProject Gutenberg,c2026 a1 online resource :bmultiple file formats atextbtxt2rdacontent acomputerbc2rdamedia aonline resourcebcr2rdacarrier aRelease date is 2026-03-07 aCarla Foust, Emmanuel Ackerman and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive) aNazi conspiracy and aggression, Volume 04 (of 11) is a collection of documentary evidence and legal materials written in the mid-20th century. Compiled for the International Military Tribunal, it presents translated Nazi laws, decrees, internal memoranda, and speeches that trace the regime’s persecution, militarization, and expansion. Expect primary sources on anti-Jewish policy, exceptional police powers, economic exploitation, youth indoctrination, and satellite-state control. The opening of this volume assembles translated Nazi laws and documents that systematize persecution and war aims: forced “Aryanization” and control of Jewish property, a collective fine, limits on public presence, the Reich Citizenship Law and its first regulation defining “Jew” and stripping rights, tenancy rules enabling eviction and compulsory billeting, and a 1943 measure sending Jewish offenses to police justice and seizing Jewish estates. It includes a secret RSHA roundup list of Weimar-era figures, decrees granting the SS extraordinary authority in annexed Austria and the Sudetenland, and the “protection” treaty that bound Slovakia to German military installations and foreign-policy alignment. Economic records show plans to immobilize Belgian and Dutch capital, a memorandum urging conquest over autarky to secure resources, and a 1942 Speer statement reallocating labor and POWs to armaments. Extensive excerpts from Baldur von Schirach’s The Hitler Youth outline the movement’s ideology, absorption of rival youth groups, pressure on confessional youth, strict discipline, and foreign youth work, followed by a 1939 order formalizing the HJ’s state authority and its cadre’s NSDAP affiliation. The section closes with a brief biographical entry on Karl Dönitz from a 1944 naval diary. (This is an automatically generated summary.) pOriginally published:cWashington D.C.: United States Government Printing Office, 1946 aNuremberg Trial of Major German War Criminals, Nuremberg, Germany, 1945-1946 aWar crime trials -- Germany -- Nuremberg aWorld War, 1939-1945 -- Germany aWorld War, 1939-1945 -- Atrocities aGermany -- Politics and government -- 1933-194540uhttps://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/78130